I was a "bookworm" in high school and college. I read many books of different disciplines, including those of the Belgian Nobel Prize-winning chemist Ilya Prigogine. His theory of nonlinear nonequilibrium thermodynamics has been used to explain the structures in organized systems. His books, especially Order Out of Chaos, inspired me to believe that there are fundamental principles underlying highly complex living beings, and I wanted to uncover some of those principles myself.
Intro to Experimental Biology
I majored in biochemistry when I studied at Fudan University in China. My curiosity about the control of biological responses made me interested in the transcriptional regulation of gene expression. I did my college thesis with a famous Chinese biochemist, Yonglian Zhang, during my senior year. I was exposed to various techniques for looking at the binding of transcription factors to promoter regions. That was my first real introduction to biology at the molecular level. To continue what I had started, I went to Shanghai Institute of Biochemistry for my master's degree. My three years of training there was a great experience. I became more scientifically mature and technically capable. Meanwhile, I decided to pursue a PhD degree in biology.
Coming to New York City
I chose to go to Columbia University for my PhD because its biological sciences department offered diverse topics of research. In the same year, an immunologist named Amer Beg finished his training with David Baltimore at MIT and joined the Columbia faculty. When Amer was at MIT, he generated a "knock-out" mouse model for the transcription factor NF-kB and discovered a critical function for NF-kB in regulating cell survival. After my rotation in Amer's lab, I was drawn to the power of mouse reverse genetics. Indeed, the 2007 Nobel Prize went to Mario Capecchi, Martin Evans, and Oliver Smithies, who together made the original contribution of introducing specific gene modifications in mice.